3. One of the reasons facial hair became so popular in Victorian times was the Crimean War. Large numbers of soldiers returned home in the mid-19th century with the moustaches and beards they’d ...
“Facial hair is certainly no stranger to the Oval ... The swing from smooth-faced Founding Fathers, to hairy mid-19th-century leaders, to today’s mostly scruff-free White House contenders ...
Mr Wallage said he had always been competitive The term "mutton chops" to describe facial hair entered the vocabulary in the 19th Century It describes whiskers that were thin at the top and bulged ...
With gently waved hair and face-framing tendrils ... He believed the ‘Gibson Girl’ was the embodiment of the 19th century woman, someone who’s graceful, independent and elegant—starting ...